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Growing Lettuce Year Round
By Nancy Garrison Updated: 06-Apr-2003 Lettuce is generally considered a cool weather plant, grown in early spring or fall, although it can be grown in the warm season in most of the SF Bay Area by choosing varieties adapted to warmer weather. Check seed catalogs for summer lettuces. Soil PreparationLettuce does best in a loose, well-drained soil, with regular watering and adequate nitrogen. Whether your soil is heavy clay or a light sandy type, the incorporation of compost will often improve the growing conditions. Homemade compost is ideal, with municipal compost made from green waste recycling being the next best. Dig thoroughly in 1-3" of compost with a shovel or spading fork to a depth of 6-8", shape the bed and level it. Just before planting, add a nitrogen fertilizer where the transplants will be planted according to fertilizer label recommendations. Good sources of organic nitrogen include alfalfa meal (my favorite), cottonseed meal, fish and/or kelp meal, as well as blood and feather meal. I have found the latter two attract dogs that try to eat the animal products, soil and all. TransplantingThe best time to transplant is the late afternoon or on an overcast day. If transplanted in hot weather, the seedlings will need some shade protection for the first few days. To transplant, carefully remove each plant from it's container by pushing the bottom of the six pack cells and lift small plants by the leaves. If the roots are at all matted, gently separate and spread them out. Set transplant slightly (1/2” or so) higher than the soil level into which it is being planted. Firmly press the soil around the rootball, making sure not to cover container soil with the garden soil but so they are nearly level with each other. Water in thoroughly. Thoroughly means watering 2 – 3 times as long as you expect it should take, as water moves into and through soil much more slowly than you think. An application of liquid fertilizer may be helpful 1-2 weeks after transplanting, as the organic nitrogen may not become available for several weeks. Plant seedlings approximately 4-6" apart so that you may eat the thinnings at the point you thin to the final distance of 8”-10” apart. Harvest Lettuce will be crisper if harvested in the early morning. Immediately after picking, wash thoroughly and get the excess moisture out. This can easily be done by placing freshly washed lettuce in a clean dish towel, hold cloth by four corners, going outside and fling in semi circle arc until water no longer flies off. Store in a plastic bag wrapped in the dishtowel to create a humid environment. Pick loose-leaf lettuce from the outside, letting the inner leaves continue to grow. Heading types such as romaine, Batavian and butterhead are usually pulled up whole, but these can also be picked outer leaves first until head begins to form Types and Varieties of Lettuces There are several major types of lettuce which include: butterhead, cos (syn 'romaine'), loose-leaf, crisphead or icebergs and Batavian or summercrisp. Cos lettuce is very upright and columnar, forming a particularly sweet creamy white, crisp heart, surrounded by sturdy outer leaves. It is fairly demanding to grow, in terms of being unforgiving of poor condition and poorly adapted to hot weather. The crispheads are the slowest to bolt, then summercrisps, butterheads, leaf lettuces and finally cos types. My favorite is the French Batavian or summercrisp, a lesser-known type. Although differences exist between the varieties, overall it is intermediate between the crisphead and the loose-leaf lettuce. The outer leaves are thick, crunchy and flavorful with the loosely heading, often conic shaped heart being buttery and sweet. These are quite large lettuces, and need good fertility. The butterhead types have thick, buttery, soft and succulent sweet leaves that form a loose head at maturity. There are more than a hundred different varieties of lettuces, with 30 or so commonly available through retail garden seed catalogs. The following are descriptions of some highly rated varieties.
Lettuce may get occasional pests including cutworms, foliage feeding caterpillars, aphids, snails and slugs. Refer to our lettuce problems page for more information. Caterpillars are most safely controlled with a biological insecticide called Bacillus thuringiensis, which goes by different brand names such as Thuricide, BT and Dipel. Snails and slugs can be trapped through use of beer placed in saucers around the garden or by using a product having the brand name of Slug Go or Escar-Go, which is an iron phosphate containing bait. Both have low toxicity to pets and the environment. Consult your favorite nursery, gardening reference book or call the your local Master Gardener Hotline for additional help. In Santa Clara County the Master Gardener hotline is (408) 282-3105 Monday - Friday 9:30 AM - 12:30 PM. Some Lettuce Seed Sources. (Inclusion or exclusion of a seed company does not imply endorsement.)
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